Arab News, Mon, Oct 14, 2024 | Rabi al-Thani 11, 1446
Saudi businesses eye opportunities with $2bn in deals amid Pakistan’s economic upturn
Saudi Arabia:
Saudi businessmen have expressed hope for
successful collaborations in Pakistan, saying the country’s economic stability
and improved regulatory framework had made it an attractive investment
destination, following the signing of over two dozen deals between companies
from both nations.
The Kingdom’s Investment Minister Khalid bin
Abdulaziz Al-Falih visited Pakistan on a three-day visit with a delegation of
over 130 members, including representatives from Saudi companies specializing in
energy, mining, and minerals, as well as agriculture, business, tourism,
industry and manpower.
The delegation on Thursday signed 27 agreements
and memorandums of understanding worth more than $2 billion with several
Pakistani companies.
“We saw much change in (Pakistan’s
business) regulations which have become much softer,” Sultan Al-Mansour,
chairman of All Care Medical Group, told Arab News, pointing out that Pakistan
was gradually moving toward economic stability. “All that positive news is
making Pakistan a good spot for investment.”
In June 2023, Pakistan constituted the Special
Investment Facilitation Council, a hybrid civil-military forum, to facilitate
foreign businesses, particularly from Gulf countries.
The Saudi investor hoped for successful
collaborations, saying his company had signed two deals with Pakistani
businesses developing surgical instruments and operating in the pharmaceutical
industry.
“Our (Pakistani) partners will be launching a
factory in Saudi Arabia in the foreseeable future,” he informed, adding the
South Asian state was rich in human resources and knowledge, and constituted a
big market.
Al-Mansour said he had collaborated with Hilbro, a
Pakistani company that will supply surgical goods to his organization in the
kingdom.
Hilbro’s sales and marketing director, Muhammad
Bilal Tariq, said his company would initially supply semi-developed products
before setting up a manufacturing unit of surgical goods in Saudi Arabia.
“We are planning to build the factory in Riyadh,”
he told Arab News.
Mohammad Al-Madani, CEO of Classera, one of the
region’s largest e-learning ed-tech companies operating in over 40 countries,
said his organization had supported numerous ministries of education, training
institutions and governments globally to transform education and training.
“We have started a big project called eTaleem
which aims to transform education using technology across this great nation (of
Pakistan),” he said.
He informed that the first phase of operations had
already started by partnering with Pakistan Telecommunication Co. Ltd., adding
it would use technology to transform education more rapidly and benefit the
country’s youth.
“We are talking about 60 million students of
Pakistan,” he said.
Al-Madani noted that human capital was a huge
asset, pointing out his collaboration in Pakistan would help advance the
country.
Mohammad Al-Hijji, chairman of the Saudi
investment company Engineering Dimension Holding, said it was a good time to
join hands with Pakistani businesses due to the government’s investment-friendly
policies.
“It is the right time and we are talking about the
investment in our partnership with our brethren at Pakistani renewable energy
company Welt Konnect, to invest in a 500-megawatt hybrid power project,” he told
Arab News.
His Pakistani partner, Habeel Ahmed Khan, termed
the collaboration a “great honor.”
“We signed an MoU with our brothers from ED
Holding for the 500-megawatt project that we have been developing in the south
of Pakistan, almost 45 minutes east of Karachi in the wind corridor of Gharo,”
he said.
Sharing details, he said the project would produce
about 168 MW of wind power and 332 MW of solar power.
“It’s going to be one of Pakistan’s first hybrid
power projects, which will supply cheap electricity to the national grid,” Khan
added.
Ghassan Amodi, CEO of Asyad Holding Group, which
is acquiring Shell operations in Pakistan, said the move was part of their
strategic plan to expand regionally.
“Our association with Shell is a longstanding
relationship, and we look forward to further developing this beyond the borders
of Saudi Arabia and now Pakistan. We are also looking for other opportunities,”
he said.
Speaking to Arab News, Pakistan’s Petroleum
Minister Musadik Malik said over 130 representatives of around 50 Saudi
companies were part of the delegation, adding that many projects and
collaborations had been finalized in the energy field during the visit.
“Two Saudi companies have flown into Pakistan, and
they will be talking about the upgradation of an old refinery, which is about a
billion-and-a-half-dollar project,” he said while informing that Pakistan also
expected to finish the study on the greenfield refinery project by December.
“Then the conversation will begin to move forward
on the $7-10 billion project,” he continued.
Malik informed that once the Saudi delegation
departs, the government would follow up on an almost weekly or fortnightly
basis.
“It will be to see where those contracts are, how
those relationships are evolving and if there’s any government-related trouble
that we need to troubleshoot and remove,” he said.